Blackhawks' Brandon Saad credits his close-knit family for his success in the NHL.

That Brandon Saad's journey to the NHL began with ball hockey games in the cul-de-sac in front of his childhood home in Gibsonia, Pa., is telling.

Family is entwined through the fabric of Saad's progression from natural athlete growing up in the community about 25 miles north of Pittsburgh to Blackhawks left wing with a future as bright as any young player in the NHL.

At 22, he has already earned the faith of coach Joel Quenneville, having played a huge role in the Hawks' run to the 2013 Stanley Cup and is an integral part of the current group locked in a battle with the Ducks in the Western Conference finals. Once the playoffs end, Saad will become a restricted free agent, one who could tempt other teams to tender him an offer sheet. But general manager Stan Bowman leaves little room for doubt about Saad's future.

"He's emerged as a guy coaches trust, so I would think he's going to play an even bigger role next year," Bowman told the Tribune. "He's ready for that. He'll be 23 and he'll have a couple of years of solid NHL experience under his belt. He's ready for taking that next step to being a featured guy.

"We'll get him signed."

Saad's odyssey to reach this point has ties that run from Syria to Pennsylvania to Chicago.

It is a tale that includes a grandfather who was an NFL official who worked two Super Bowls, a father who moved to the United States from Syria at 18 and continues to work to bring every relative still in the war-torn country to safety in the United States, a stay-at-home mother who introduced her two sons to hockey and a brother who was a standout player and mentor before injuries derailed his career.

They helped Saad develop from a boy who collected hundreds of hockey pucks that he kept under his bed and at one point told teachers he didn't need to study "because I'm going to be a hockey player someday" to the top line of the Hawks.

If the Blackhawks were going to go through all that nonsense in the third period, they figured they might as well win it in overtime because that’s the only time they’ve won in the Western Conference finals. Here’s the 5 Things blog about Hawks 5, Ducks 4 in double-OT:

If the Blackhawks were going to go through all that nonsense in the third period, they figured they might as well win it in overtime because that’s the only time they’ve won in the Western Conference finals. Here’s the 5 Things blog about Hawks 5, Ducks 4 in double-OT:

"We were always close growing up, whether it was my parents or brother doing sports together and my parents working to provide for us and taking care of us," Saad said. "They are the reason I'm here today."

It was those countless hockey games on roller blades in Gibsonia against friends and brother George Saad Jr. that kicked things off.

"In the street, we always played against each other," Brandon said of his older brother. "Being a couple of years older, he was always a little bigger, a little stronger and faster, and that helped me with trying to compete with the big boys. It helped me elevate my game."

First, though, mother Sandra had to step in and make an adjustment.

"Brandon always wanted to be a goalie," she said. "I said, 'Son, you can't be there, you have too much speed, so don't even think about it.' "

Saad's speed, natural ability and drive became apparent early on.

"He never liked to lose," George Jr. said. "Being brothers we always battled it out and pushed each other. He always was very driven. If he did lose, he always wanted to keep playing until he won. He always gave his best to be the best he could be."

Tribune writers David Haugh and Chris Kuc analyze the Blackhawks' Game 4 victory.

Tribune writers David Haugh and Chris Kuc analyze the Blackhawks' Game 4 victory.

Her father, Gil Mace, was an NFL official, who worked Super Bowl XVIII in 1984 as a back judge and Super Bowl XXI in 1987 as a side judge.

Brandon and his brother played hockey and football in high school but eventually had to make a decision, and hockey won out. They played together in junior hockey before George Jr. headed off to Penn State.

"I played a lot of sports growing up, just trying to be a well-rounded athlete and then when I got to high school I just focused on hockey," Brandon said. "I've always seemed to have success at it and always had more fun playing it. I love the speed of the game."

Saad eventually landed in the U.S. National Team Development Program, where he caught Bowman's eye as a non-draft-eligible underage player.

"When I went to watch the U.S. program, they said the best forwards on this team are the underages and this kid here, Saad, is going to be a great player next year," Bowman said. "The next year he went to Saginaw (of the Ontario Hockey League) and I remember seeing him play early in the year. He was skilled, but he wasn't like Patrick Kane. He wasn't dazzling, he just was effective. He did the right things all the time. He's strong and he just knew how to play the game. That's sort of how it came to be that we drafted him."

The Hawks did so in the second round of the 2011 NHL draft, and two years later he was skating on the top line with Jonathan Toews and Marian Hossa, helping lead the Hawks to their second Stanley Cup in four years.

"(Saad) is a powerful guy," Bowman said. "When you play with two elite players like Toews and Hossa, those guys are superstars, so for a young kid to come in and be able to read off them and be able to complement them to the point where they enjoy playing with him? That says something. They enjoyed playing with him from the first time that line came together. It's his recognition, his ability to instinctively know how they're going to play."

Said Toews: (Saad) is a smart player. I said this when he was in his first year in the league, he was scoring, he was making big plays (and) making a difference in games. A young player sometimes may have a couple good games and they get excited and may sit back and rest on their laurels, (but) he wasn't satisfied. He kept building off the good games. He continues to do that."

Saad took a big step this season, during which he set career highs with 23 goals — including six game-winners — 29 assists and 52 points. He has played a big role in the Hawks' run to the Western Conference finals against the Ducks with four goals — including a key short-handed score during the first period of the Hawks' 5-4 victory against the Ducks in Game 4 on Saturday night.

"He's going to be a big part of our team going forward," Bowman said. "Looking at the landscape, we've got Toews and Kane, and Saad and (Teuvo) Teravainen are sort of going to be the next tandem that's going to be significant players for us for years to come."

One potential hurdle is another team submitting an offer sheer for Saad that the Hawks would have to match. A big offer could further deepen the Hawks' salary-cap woes, but Bowman said he isn't concerned.

"I don't worry about that," Bowman said. "He's a big part of this and he's going to continue to be."

Saad said he is fine with that.

"I want to end up in Chicago for sure," he said. "They've treated me nothing but great here."

Whatever his future holds, Saad's family will continue to be by his side. His biggest fans are his parents, led by his hockey-crazed father, George Sr., who grew up in Syria, not exactly a hockey hotbed.

Among those are the family members the land developer has brought to the U.S. from Syria, which is in the throes of a violent civil war.

"Most of my family is in the States," George Sr. said. "We're Christians, and the Christian families in Syria unfortunately have been killed and slaughtered. We had to sponsor them to avoid (persecution). There are a couple of more sisters that I'm going to bring in the next couple of months with their families. They're learning the language, (and) they're improving in school. They're fitting into the culture nicely."

Brandon Saad has followed the developments even while focusing on hockey.

"I know we're getting most of them to come over here and live near us and become American citizens and work," he said. "It's been great hearing stories about that. Any day with stuff going on there anything can happen, but for the majority they're all safe and it feels good."

That is important to Saad, who credits his upbringing and continued closeness with his family for his success.

"That's a huge part of it to have that support," he said. "All of us want to be here, but to have that drive and have that support behind you is always huge. For me, personally, it's why I'm here."